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Photo: Nick Paton Walsh

In the two years before becoming Asia correspondent, he covered the war between Russia and Georgia, and was undercover correspondent in Harare during the Zimbabwean elections.

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Job losses cause unrest in China »

China's leadership is coming under pressure as factories close and job losses begin to mount, reports Nick Paton Walsh.

China protests

China's used metal market crisis »

Where there is muck there is brass, or there was till China's massive used metal market was credit crunched; now things are turning violent. Nick Paton Walsh reports.

Chinese scrap

Delhi warned of attack threat »

The US is reported to have warned India of a possible terrorist threat at least a month before the Mumbai attacks, reports Nick Paton Walsh.

Biography

A Russia specialist, Nick became Asia correspondent in September 2008.

In the two years before that, he covered the war between Russia and Georgia, and was the programme's undercover correspondent in Harare during the Zimbabwean elections.

He also covered the announcement of the US troop surge in Iraq in Washington and its implementation in Baghdad, and Mosul.

He gained an exclusive interview with Andrei Lugovoi, the Russia accused of poisoning former spy Alexander Litvinenko, on the day he was charged with murder.

He's reported from central and eastern Afghanistan, from Gaza, the Central African Republic, Mexico, Yakutsk, Ingushetia, and even Paris.

Nick joined Channel 4 News as foreign affairs correspondent in September 2006.

Prior to that he was Moscow correspondent for the Guardian for four years. During this time he covered the Beslan and Dubrovka theatre sieges and the Georgian, Ukrainian and Kyrgyz "revolutions".

Last year he won Amnesty International's Gaby Rado Award for a journalist at the start of their career, and also the EU's Lorenzo Natali Award for human rights reporting.

In 2000, whilst a reporter at the Observer, he was the British Press Awards' Young Journalist of the Year.

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